Many
people are under the impression that CoE can tell you a wide number of things
about fusing glass.
What
does CoE really mean?
The
first thing to note is the meaning of CoE.
Its proper name is the coefficient of linear expansion. It tells
you nothing certain about the expansion in volume, which can be as or more
important than the horizontal expansion.
It
is an average determined between 20°C and 300°C.
This is fine for materials that have a crystalline structure. Glass does
not. Glass behaves quite differently at
higher temperatures.
It
may have an average expansion of 96 from 20°C-300°C – although there is no
information on the variation within that range – but may have an expansion of 500
just above the annealing point.
The
critical temperatures for glass are between the annealing and strain
points. One curious aspect to the
expansion of glass is that the rate of expansion decreases around the annealing
point. The amount of this change is
variable from one glass composition to another.
The
CoE of a manufacturer’s glass is an average of the range which is
produced. Spectrum has stated that their
CoE of their fusing compatible glass is a 10 point range. Bullseye has indicated that their CoE range is up to 5 points. These kind of
ranges can be expected in every manufacturer’s compatible glass.
CoE
does not tell us anything about viscosity, which has a bigger influence on
compatibility than CoE alone.
Comparison
of CoE and Temperature
Among
the things people assume CoE determines is the critical temperatures of
the strain, annealing and softening points of various glasses.
Unfortunately,
CoE does not necessarily tell you fusing or annealing temperatures.
“CoE 83”
Most
float glass is assumed to be around CoE 83.
The characteristics depend on which company is making the glass and
where it is being made.
Pilkington
float made in the UK has an annealing point of 540°C and a softening point
(normally the slump point) of 720°C.
Typical
USA float anneals at 548°C and has a softening point of 615°C.
Typical
Australian float has a CoE of 84 and anneals in the range 505°C -525°C.
“CoE 90”
Uroboros
FX90 has an annealing point of 525°C compared to Bullseye at 482°C, and
Wissmach 90 anneal of 510°C.
Wissmach
90 has a full fuse temperature of 777°C compared to Bullseye's 804 - 816°C.
There
is a float glass with a CoE of 90 that anneals at 540°C and fuses at 835°C.
Bullseye
has a slump temperature of 630°C-677°C and Wissmach’s 90 slumps between 649°C
and 677°C, slightly higher.
“CoE 93”
Kokomo
with an average CoE of 93 has an annealing range of 507°C to 477°C. Kokomo slumps
around 565°C
“CoE 94”
Artista
with a CoE of 94 has an annealing point of 535°C and a full
fuse
of 835°C, almost the same as float with a Coe of 83.
“CoE96”
Wissmach
96 anneals at 482°C with a full fuse of 777°C and a slump temperature of 688°C.
Spectrum96 and its successor Oceanside Compatible anneals at 510°C and full fuses at 796°C.
Conclusion
In
short, CoE does not tell you the temperature characteristics of the glass.
These are determined by several factors of which viscosity is the most
important. More information can be gained from this post or
from your own testing and observation as noted in this post.
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